It's a Bird, It's a Plane ... It's Nikki Giovanni's Bat?

February 11, 2008

Throughout her career, world-renowned poet, activist and educator Nikki Giovanni has
received countless honors and awards – and now, thanks to a Texas Tech researcher,
she can add her own species of bat to the list.

Written by: Ben Samples

Throughout her career, world-renowned poet, activist and educator Nikki Giovanni has
received countless honors and awards – and now, thanks to a Texas Tech researcher,
she can add her own species of bat to the list.

Robert Baker, a Horn professor of biological sciences, discovered the new species
in 2001 during a research excursion in West Ecuador. The discovery, said Baker, allowed
him a unique opportunity in the scientific world.

"There are literally millions of stars in the sky to be named, but probably no more
than 2,000 species of mammals remain to be named," Baker said. "In the grand scheme
of things, using one of those opportunities to make a statement about somebody is
a special deal.

"I decided to choose someone whose life work I respected immensely, but that I had
never had contact with. It was a way of going outside of my own world."

"I enjoy reading her poetry and I come from the Deep South, so I really can appreciate
what she has done for race relations and equality," Baker said.

Baker remembers breaking the news to Giovanni, and how it was slightly reminiscent
of an adolescent prank.

"I wrote to her, ‘You don’t know me and this isn’t a joke, but I want to name a bat
after you.’" Baker said. "I told her it was a serious honor, but I wished to have
her permission and not to offend her."

Giovanni – amused by the proposition – accepted and even toted her newly acquired
honor to a Washington Post reporter, Baker said.

"They did a story on her after she was nominated for a couple of humanitarian awards,"
Baker said. "She told the reporter she wasn’t going to win and everyone would ask,
‘Who’s that woman in black?’ But she didn’t care, because she was special – she had
a bat named after her."